Building an anti-cuts voice in council elections

Lambeth

New Labour-led Lambeth council called the Brixton Hill byelection for 17 January, minimising scrutiny of their cuts programme with a short election campaign period.

In near zero temperatures, the Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition campaign - supported by the local anti-cuts movement - was enormously positive.

Despite the short campaign, the whole ward was leafleted with two-thirds canvassed. Unlike many elections, TUSC received coverage in the local press and 80 people heard our candidate speak at a hustings meeting organised by the Brixton Bugle.

A complication was that the purely propagandist Socialist Party of Great Britain also stood. However the combined TUSC and SPGB vote was 4.2 %.

Crucially the campaign has given TUSC authority to call a meeting to coordinate an anti-cuts challenge across Lambeth in the full council elections in 2014.

David Maples

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Brixton Hill

Labour 1593 62.6%

Green 344 13.5%

Lib Dems 274 10.8%

Tories 164 6.4%

TUSC 72 2.8%

Ukip 63 2.5%

SPGB 34 1.3%

Turnout 22.8%

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Wirral

In December a local campaigner presented a petition of 8,000 names against the cuts to Wirral council.

Addressing the Labour council, he said "they're laughing at you," referring to a Tory motion accusing the Labour council of cutting too far, too fast.

It seems the local Tories oppose every specific cut proposed, but support cutting £109 million from a £287 million budget.

Wirral held two byelections on 17 January - called with a week's notice, nominations closed on 20 December. This cynical move limited campaigning against the cuts.

But Labour still took a kicking - they lost Leasowe and Moreton East despite a 'local celebrity' candidate, with their share of the vote falling from 51% to 42%. In the safe Tory seat of Heswall, Labour's vote fell from 18% to 13%.

The Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition (TUSC) stood in both seats, with two young workers, Socialist Party members Mark Halligan and Greg North as candidates.

The timing of the elections meant we had limited campaigning time in seats we had never stood in before.

We achieved 31 votes in Leasow and Moreton East beating the Lib Dems and Greens, and 19 votes in Heswall.

Labour councillors continue to bleat about illegal budgets and district commissioners (regardless of the truth) while slashing jobs and services; we continue to build an anti-cuts movement.